Santa Clara County Biographies
This file is part of the California Genealogy & History Archives
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cagha/index.htm
W. FRANK OLDHAM
was born in Greenville District, South Carolina, December 16, 1826, his parents
being also natives of that State. Major George Oldham, his grandfather, was a
Revolutionary officer and fought the battle of the Cowpens alongside of Dekalb.
When the subject was six years old, his parents removed to Selma, Alabama, where
he was reared and educated and clerked in a store. His parents died when he was
seventeen years old. On May 1, 1852, he started for California by way of
Nicaragua, where he remained three months, when he came on to California and
located in San Francisco. There he was employed for eight years by the firm of
Jonas G. Clark & Co., and then he came to Gilroy and engaged in the hotel and
livery business, conducting the old " Exchange " in partnership with George
Roop, with whom he had been previously connected for a year in the business of
driving cattle from Los Angeles County to San Francisco. He was in the hotel
business about ten years, and while so engaged he and Mr. Roop bought the Gilroy
Hot Springs and improved and made a resort of them. Upon closing out his hotel
and livery business he engaged in farming near San Felipe for about ten years,
when he removed to the place where he now resides, which he had previously
purchased.
He was married, in Gilroy, January 6, 1862, to Miss Martha R. Martin,
daughter of Julius and Elizabeth Martin, and has one child, Maud. He had a son,
Ashley by name, who died in November, 1882, at the age of eighteen years. He was
a member of the class of 1883 at the San Mateo Military Academy. He was at the
time at the head of the Military Department and at the head of his classes also.
In politics Mr. Oldham is a Democrat, and was the first Mayor of Gilroy, holding
the office two years.. His family are Episcopalians. He has a ranch of
twenty-five acres, one-half mile north of Gilroy, on the San Jose and Monterey
road, four acres of which are in orchard set out in the winter of 1884-85,
containing a variety of trees. The land is well adapted to the stone fruits, and
he intends to set out ten acres during the coming winter. He erected his present
residence in 1869, although it has the appearance of a new house. He has a few
head of cattle. He rents land from others and farms from 100 to 200 acres every
year. He regards fruit as the proper crop to raise in this locality.
Pen Pictures From The Garden of the World or Santa Clara County, California,
Illustrated. - Edited by H. S. Foote.- Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company,
1888.
Pg. 597-598